Answer:
According to us , the taste of water is tasteless and the odour of water is
adourless.
But in the differrent place, the taste and the odour of water can be different. The
example is : the water of sea , the taste of it is salty and odourless.
Boiller is a furnace in a variety of shapes and sizes that are used to produce
steam through the evaporation of water to be used in generating electricity
through turbines, chemical processing, and heating in production.
The system works the water is converted into steam. The heat supplied to the
water in the boiler, and the steam generated on - constantly. Boiler feed water is
sent to a steam boiler to replace the lost. When the steam leaving the boiler
water, solid particles are initially dissolved in the feed water boiler lagging.
3.if people get less water in their life what are the effects for huan being ?
Answer:
If people get less water in their life thats all will bring many bad effects.
The people cant to operate their life well. The example are to cooking ,
To drink , to washing , to take a bath and anymore , they need water to do it ,
so if they get less water they will get big problem , and if get less water ,
that problem will make problem in their health. The example is they will be
dehydration and they will get ill , such as kidney , their skin will be dry ,
they will get cought , and thats all will be fatal and being death .
4.Tell the distribution of water with your own words !
In rural areas, most homes and businesses get their water from groundwater.
Long ago, wells had to be dug by hand and reached only shallow groundwater.
Now wells can be drilled by machinery to as deep as several hundred feet. In
urban and suburban areas, most water is piped in from a central water supply.
The water supply might be a river, a natural lake, a reservoir behind a dam, or a
number of deep wells. In many big cities, reservoirs are located far away, and the
water is brought to the city through aqueducts
In urban and suburban areas, water is distributed from the source through large
underground pipes, called water mains, under the streets. A map of the water
mains in your town would look something like the pattern of branches on a tree
or the pattern of tributaries in a river system. The water mains keep branching
out into smaller and smaller pipes until they reach a home or other building,
where they enter the building and pass through a water meter. In areas with cold
winters, the mains and pipes have to be buried as deep as several feet below the
surface to keep them from freezing.
RICHO CRISTIAN.H.N